8.8 C
New York
Sunday, November 24, 2024
HomeUK NewsBBC does not have an ‘agenda’, says chief to staff in India

BBC does not have an ‘agenda’, says chief to staff in India

Date:

Related stories

Manhunt underway for husband after murder of Harshitha Brella in east London

Police are searching for Pankaj Lamba, who is suspected...

London mayor Sadiq Khan criticizes Trump’s policies as divisive and prejudiced

London Mayor Sadiq Khan has condemned U.S. president-elect Donald...

Starmer attends Armistice Day in Paris, first UK PM to participate since Churchill

In a historic move, Prime Minister Keir Starmer attended...

Badenoch appoints Priti Patel and Mel Stride to lead Tory shadow cabinet

Opening Paragraph: Conservative Party leader Kemi Badenoch has appointed Mel...

Reeves to prioritize NHS with significant funding boost in budget

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to announce billions of...

THE BBC is not driven by an “agenda” but by purpose and will not be put off reporting impartially and without fear or favour, the UK-headquartered media organisation’s chief has said days after the income tax department survey operation at its New Delhi and Mumbai offices.

In an email to BBC staff in India last week, director general Tim Davie thanked them for their courage as he stressed that nothing was more important than reporting impartially. He added that the BBC would help staff in India do their jobs effectively and safely.

“Nothing is more important than our ability to report without fear or favour,” Davie said in the email, reported by the BBC.

“Our duty to our audiences around the world is to pursue the facts through independent and impartial journalism, and to produce and distribute the very best creative content. We won’t be put off from that task. I’d like to be clear: the BBC does not have an agenda – we are driven by purpose. And our first public purpose is to provide impartial news and information to help people understand and engage with the world around them,” he said.

The income tax survey came weeks after the London-headquartered public broadcaster aired a controversial two-part documentary in the UK, India: The Modi Question, referencing prime minister Narendra Modi and the 2002 Gujarat riots.

- Advertisement -

The email from Davie came a week after I-T officials spent three days carrying out what they called a “survey” at the BBC offices. In an official statement at the end of the searches, the BBC said that it will “continue to cooperate” with the authorities and hopes matters are resolved as soon as possible.

In its statement following the survey, the central board of direct taxes said it had found discrepancies and that the income and profits disclosed by the organisation’s units were “not commensurate with the scale of operations in India”.

Recently, the British government strongly defended the BBC and its editorial freedom in Parliament. It said: “We stand up for the BBC. We fund the BBC. We think the BBC World Service is vital.”

David Rutley, a UK foreign office minister, was responding to an urgent question raised in the house of commons by the opposition parties, some of whom branded the action a ‘deliberate act of intimidation following the release of an unflattering documentary about the country’s leader’ and sharply criticised the UK government for failing to make a statement on the issue sooner.

(PTI)

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories